Disappearance of Ruth Wilson
Ruth Wilson is a British teenager from Betchworth, near Dorking in Surrey, England who disappeared on 27 November 1995.[2]
Ruth Wilson | |
---|---|
Born | 31 January 1979 |
Disappeared | 27 November 1995 (aged 16) |
Status | Missing for 25 years, 2 months and 9 days |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Schoolgirl |
Height | 5ft 3in (1.57m) |
Parent(s) | Ian Wilson Karen Wilson (stepmother)[1] Nesta Wilson (birth mother)[1] |
Relatives | Jennifer Wilson (sister) |
Family and home life
Ruth Wilson is the daughter of Ian and Nesta Wilson.[1] Her mother was born in Wellingborough on 1 May 1948 and was given the name Nesta Landeg by her adoptive parents.[3] Ian and Nesta were married in 1976 in Newport. When Wilson was four years old and her sister, Jenny, was a few months old, Nesta died.[1] According to the story told to Wilson by the family, Nesta's death was a result of an accidental fall down stairs, but her death certificate recorded her cause of death as suicide. The death certificate states that Nesta died by hanging on 10 December 1982.[3] Unbeknownst to her family, Wilson became aware of the true nature of her mother's death before she disappeared.[4]
Wilson's father, Ian G. Wilson, married Karen I. Bowerman in the last quarter of 1983 in Surrey. Both Wilson's father and step-mother worked as teachers. Ian also served as a local parish councillor.
Wilson enjoyed reading, going on bike rides and music. She played the electric guitar and piano. She also had a Saturday job working in a music shop and was a popular local babysitter. She was studying for her A levels at The Ashcombe School Sixth Form when she disappeared. She attended her local church, St Michael’s. She was a member of the choir, played the organ and enjoyed bell-ringing.[5]
Around October 1995, according to Catherine Mair, a friend, Wilson developed the belief that her biological mother's death was not as she had been told. She travelled to London to examine Nesta's death certificate. Ben Anderton, a schoolfriend of Wilson's, says she ran away from home a month before her final disappearance and hid at his house in Betchworth.
Mair was due to move to Sheffield, South Yorkshire, and Wilson had asked if she could come with her once she was settled. Wilson went missing a few weeks after Mair moved.[4] Mair's mother recalled that Wilson had slept over not long before she disappeared and had been adamant that she did not want to go back home. Wilson did not explain why.[4] Mair has stated that Wilson had talked about running away but not suicide.[4] Wilson's parents have refuted claims that her home life was unhappy.[6]
Events
On the Saturday before her disappearance, Wilson worked her usual job in a music shop in Dorking, then went for a meal[2] with her ex-boyfriend, Will Kennedy, and another friend, Neil Phillipson. Kennedy and Phillipson both stated that Wilson paid for the meal and told them it would be ‘something to remember her by’.
Wilson went for handbell practice at the local church on Sunday, then went to a youth group in Dorking, then back to Kennedy's for supper.[2] His mother gave her some old clothing.[2] Her family remembered her being relaxed.[2]
Disappearance
Wilson's parents left early for work on the day of her disappearance, leaving Wilson and her sister Jenny to catch the school bus.[2] At the last moment Wilson told Jenny that she wasn't going with her on the bus.[2] Jenny wasn't surprised as Wilson was in the Sixth form and didn't always come in for the whole day, though she was surprised that her sister left it so late to tell her before the arrival of the bus.[2]
Shortly after Jenny left for school, Kennedy appeared with his car and offered Ruth a lift.[2] She declined, saying she would meet up later.[2] She did not attend school at all that day.[2] At around 11.30 am, Wilson took a taxi into Dorking.[7] Around midday, she ordered flowers for her stepmother from Thistles Florists at 257 Dorking High Street. Wilson asked that they not be delivered until the following Wednesday.[2][8]
Wilson spent the afternoon in Dorking Library.[7] Around 4 pm she took a taxi from Dorking railway station to Box Hill.[2] She was dropped off on a bridleway a short way from the Hand in Hand pub (now The Box Tree) on Box Hill.[2][8][9] The taxi driver stated that Wilson displayed unusual behaviour in that she simply stood still in the rain as he drove off. This was notable as the taxi driver observed that people typically walk away after they have been dropped off. In other reports the taxi driver stated that Ruth appeared to be looking round for someone. The taxi driver was the last person to see her at 4.30 pm.[4][7]
At the time of her disappearance Ruth was wearing a red knitted jumper, black velvet trousers, black pixie boots and a small lady's watch on her left wrist.[10] She had a small blue duffel bag with a personal stereo and tapes.[11] Liam McAuley, a 58-year-old retired police officer investigating the disappearance observed that Wilson was 'dressed to get into another car' implying that a third party may have been involved and running away seemed more likely than suicide. McAuley also stated that disappearing completely would be ‘very difficult’.[6] Wilson disappeared 14 days before the 13th anniversary of her mother's death.[3]
Aftermath
That night Surrey Police organised a search for Wilson with a helicopter, police dogs and heat seeking equipment. They searched the Box Hill area but found no solid clues as to her whereabouts.[8] It was subsequently discovered that she frequently went to Box Hill after school.[2] She was also concerned about her performance at school and had kept a school report from her parents that weekend.[2]
On 29 November (2 days after the disappearance), the flowers ordered by Wilson were delivered to her step mother Karen. The flowers were described by Ian Wilson as ‘an expensive bouquet’ in subsequent reports. There was no note attached to the flowers.[12] Wilson's friend Mair interpreted this gesture as 'sticking two fingers up' to her step mother.[4]
On Friday 1 December (4 days after the disappearance), as reported in The Times newspaper (29 December 1995) police found three notes hidden under a bush in the undergrowth at the top edge of Betchworth Quarry on Box Hill.[11] The notes amounted to farewells to her parents, her best friend and a teenage boy she knew. Nearby were found empty packets of paracetamol tablets and a half empty bottle of Vermouth.[5][11] The police have never divulged the contents of the notes to the public.
On Saturday 2 December (5 days after the disappearance) a large scale search was organised by the police and fire and rescue services which included 60 volunteers comprising local members of the public, school friends, colleagues and wardens from the National Trust.[11] The search utilised a police helicopter, tracker dogs and thermal imaging equipment.[11] A detailed search of the Betchworth Quarry end of Box Hill was undertaken by a trained search and rescue team along with employees of the owners of the quarry Nionisle Ltd.[11]
Mark Williams-Thomas, who was the family liaison officer for Wilson's case, stated that extensive searches across Box Hill had yielded no evidence to suggest she was killed or committed suicide.[13] He also stated that he was sure Wilson was not abducted by a stranger. Williams-Thomas also stated that "From the experience I have had, I would suggest one of two things occurred. She either went up there to meet someone and has subsequently gone away, or she went there and died in some way."[13]
On Friday 8 December 1995 Ian and Karen Wilson appeared on the ITV network's mid-morning programme This Morning to appeal for information. They stated that they believed that Ruth was still alive but afraid to come home.[14]
Eight months after the disappearance, Catherine Mair was visited at her new home in Sheffield by the police. The officers broke off from questioning her to look in her wardrobe, as if she might have been harbouring Wilson. The Police assigned the code name Operation Scholar to the case. The unsolved missing persons case is reviewed on a regular basis and is being led by DCI Alex Geldart. Surrey Police have stated that the investigation would be re-opened if any new evidence or lines of enquiry came to light.[15]
Possible sightings
On 6 October 1996 Stuart Qualtrough wrote in The People newspaper: It is believed Ruth was spotted on the outskirts of London on Tuesday (1 October 1996) after cable station L!VE TV appealed for help on their Missing Persons' programme.
On the first anniversary of the disappearance a person thought to resemble Wilson was captured on CCTV at a Dorking newsagent's shop two miles from Box Hill.[8][12] The female teenager was distressed and requested a copy of each of the local newspapers and became visibly upset when she was told that one had sold out. The newspaper shop owner reported the encounter to the police and saved the CCTV footage.[12] The local newspapers featured reference to Wilson’s disappearance. Ruth's parents stated in an article in The Times on 2 January 1997 that they believed the girl in the video was Ruth.[12]
Speaking on the tenth anniversary of Wilson's disappearance, Sgt Shane Craven, head of East Surrey police's missing persons team, stated that "In the weeks following Ruth’s disappearance there were some fairly reliable sightings of her in the Dorking area by people who knew her well".[16] Sightings have been reported as far afield as Canada. A Surrey Advertiser article by Rebecca Younger (dated 9 December 2008) announced an appeal to mark the 13th anniversary of the disappearance. In this appeal Surrey Police revealed that they were investigating a posting on a MySpace site about a possible sighting in Canada. The missing persons team have stated that they followed up every lead.[13]
In 2018, a local newspaper sent out an appeal to anyone who had known Wilson at the time to come forward with any information that could shed light on the disappearance. Roxy Birch, who had known Wilson at school and portrayed her in a police reconstruction video, claimed that Wilson didn't drive and didn't own a passport at the time of her disappearance, which would have made long distance and international travel more difficult. Another friend Kay Blenard stated 'My belief is that she had planned to do something. I don’t know whether that would be permanent or temporary. I’d also like to believe that someone knows what happened'[17]
The same year, Jon Savell, the chief superintendent of public protection at Surrey police gave a review of the case in which he stated; “There are five explanations for Ruth Wilson’s disappearance; A tragic accident, abduction, suicide, murder, or that she had absented herself to start a new life.”[18]
Documentary
A documentary film about the case titled Vanished: the Surrey Schoolgirl was produced in 2018. It introduced some new witnesses, mainly friends of the missing girl. Wilson's parents were asked if they wanted to be involved but declined the offer.[1]
See also
- List of people who disappeared
- Disappearance of Andrew Gosden – Unsolved 2007 case of 14 year-old from Doncaster who disappeared from Central London while truant
- Murder of Milly Dowler
References
- Bright, Martin (29 April 2018). "Ruth Wilson, the schoolgirl who caught a cab to oblivion". The Observer. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
- Bright, Martin (15 December 2002). "The vanishing". The Observer. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
- Death Certificate (Death Certificate) (Report). Redhill: Surrey South Eastern. 14 January 1983. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
Date and place of death: 10 December 1982, Redhill General Hospital
- Real Stories (27 April 2018), Vanished: The Surrey Schoolgirl (Missing Person Documentary) - Real Stories Original, retrieved 4 May 2018
- Jenkins, Russell (29 December 1995). "'Since you've gone, this is a house without music'". The Times. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
- Real Stories (27 April 2018), Vanished: The Surrey Schoolgirl (Missing Person Documentary) - Real Stories Original, retrieved 4 May 2018
- "Ruth Wilson – Surrey – 1995". The UK & Ireland Database. 23 June 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
- "Plea to trace missing teenager Ruth Wilson 14 years on". BBC News. BBC News. 25 March 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
- Bright, Martin (15 December 2002). "The vanishing". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
- "The Doe Network: Case File 498DFUK". www.doenetwork.org. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- Staff (7 December 1995). "Suicide fears for schoolgirl". The Surrey Mirror.
- Jenkins, Russell (2 January 1997). "Video convinces parents their daughter is not dead". The Times. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
- Younger, Rebecca (9 December 2008). "Fresh appeal to find missing Ruth". Surrey Advertiser. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
- Staff (14 December 1995). "Search for girl goes national". The Surrey Mirror.
- Steed, Les (14 November 2017). "Documentary to look at bizarre disappearance of Betchworth girl". getsurrey. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- Surrey Live (6 January 2006). "Mystery of girl missing for 10 years". Surrey Live. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
- Bright, Martin (29 April 2018). "Ruth Wilson, the schoolgirl who caught a cab to oblivion". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
- Bright, Martin (29 April 2018). "Ruth Wilson, the schoolgirl who caught a cab to oblivion". The Guardiand. Retrieved 5 March 2020.